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Re: How I spent my morning. Because I know you want to know...

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Eleanore F. Joslin

unread,
Nov 14, 2012, 7:22:16 PM11/14/12
to
'Lickin' Ass and Fakin' Military Service' is a Proven Fraud, a Proven
Liar, a Proven Thief, and recently a Proven Malicious Poster. She is
the most prolific liar in this newsgroup and also the most prolific
thief of other's writings. She is also a Stolen Valor stain on
America. Note that when you reply to a Proven Liar you encourage them
to continue lying.

[][][][][][]


The DemocRAT Hall Of Shame http://www.democrathallofshame.com/ asks
"Why do you always LIE?"


On Sun, 28 Mar 2010 20:51:51 -0400, Kickin' Ass and Takin' Names
<PopUl...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>Re: Gunnuts slapped down in Iowa . . . domestic abusers cannot own firearms
>http://www.iowapolitics.com/index.iml?Article=189993
>DES MOINES – Governor Chet Culver today signed legislation that will
>help protect Iowa families by taking guns out of the hands of abusers.
>Senate File 2357 prohibits a person who has been convicted of a
>domestic abuse crime, or is subject to a permanent civil protective
>order, from possessing firearms or other offensive weapons.

Oops! Caught LYING, again:

National Rifle Association updates controversial Iowa weapons proposal
December 24, 2009
http://blogs.desmoinesregister.com/dmr/index.php/2009/12/24/national-rifle-association-updates-controversial-iowa-weapons-proposal/
[...]
Here are the key points in the NRA’s updated version:
[...]
MORE PEOPLE DISQUALIFIED: More people would be disqualified from
getting a permit for a concealed weapon, but those factors are
required by federal law, the NRA memo says. People with a felony
record, a domestic violence restraining order, an adjudicated mental
condition, or prior convictions for domestic violence could not get a
permit.
[...]
This proposal would bring Iowa’s standards into compliance with the
federal “prohibited persons” law, the NRA memo says.
[...]
THREE YEARS GOOD BEHAVIOR: If a person is convicted of an aggravated
or serious misdemeanor, they’d have to avoid a similar conviction for
three years before he or she could get a permit. However, conviction
of a domestic violence misdemeanor would mean permanent
disqualification, as currently required under federal law.

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